It isn’t enough for flyers to voice their dislike of airport security delays on social media. Congress and the TSA need to solve the airport security line quagmire before the year’s busiest period for air travel begins.

— Andrew Sheivachman

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U.S. airlines have been pressing the government to act to reduce the intolerably long security lines at the nation’s airports. Now, they’re even asking passengers for help by sharing their frustration on social media.

Lines during peak hours at some airports have topped 90 minutes. The airlines already are warning customers to arrive at the airport two hours in advance, and are fearful the situation will only get worse with a record number of travelers expected this summer.

Earlier this week, the Transportation Security Administration said it would increase staffing at security checkpoints and boost the number of bomb-sniffing dogs to make the lines move more quickly. The agency also is asking Congress for more money to hire additional screeners and pay existing ones overtime.

Both sides have encouraged travelers to enroll in the TSA’s expedited screening program called PreCheck. But the airlines also want travelers to do something that comes more naturally: complain.

Airlines for America, the industry’s trade group, just launched a website called iHateTheWait.com , encouraging fliers to post photos of the lines on Twitter and Instagram along with the hashtag #iHateTheWait. Presumably this will make Congress more aware of the problem — and let fellow travelers know what they’re in for when they get to the airport.

The group’s spokeswoman Jean Medina, said the campaign is “raising awareness of the issue and serving as crowd-sourced (wait time) information.”

While the number of travelers is on the rise, there are fewer agents to screen them. The number of front-line screeners was cut by 10 percent in the past three years, based on the assumption that travelers would enroll in PreCheck. They did not.

The airline trade group, which represents Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Hawaiian Airlines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines, said on the iHateTheWait website that engaging in the social media campaign will “help cut wait times for everyone who flies.”

TSA spokesman Michael England would not comment about the site but said the TSA’s goal is to keep all passengers safe and suggests that passengers get to the airport two hours early for domestic flights.

Copyright (2016) Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

This article was written by Scott Mayerowitz from The Associated Press and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.

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